The World Is Taking Stupid Pills

What was the point of
doing this? Was it to prove that you're completely out of touch with
people 20-35 because if so, you succeeded brilliantly. 10 questions is
pathetic. If you can't answer 100 questions (which represent 7.4% of
questions asked as I write this) in ~60 min, then don't bother coming
back on the internet.

If you ignored the people helping you to do this AMA, then it's your
own fault. If some PR person coached you and told you to just do 10
questions and bail before 60 mins were up, then they don't understand
Reddit and they should not be getting tax payer money to scam the
Primier of Ontario into doing something that makes Canadians look like
idiots.

A three-month-old baby with an imposing name is making
history in British Columbia by becoming the province's first child with three
official parents.

But Della Wolf Kangro Wiley Richards is by no means alone in
the world of three-pronged family trees. In fact, it may be just a matter of
time before children with three biological parents walk among us.

What will be left of this poor kid after her "parents" are done using her as their little experiment/finger-to-society? There is nothing "lucky" for this child, hack writer.

A single picture captures the regret, shame and rage
that Kim Gun-ja has harboured through most of her 89 years. Dressed in a
long white wedding gown, she carries a bouquet of red flowers and
stares at the camera, her deep wrinkles obscured by makeup and a
diaphanous veil.

A local company arranged wedding-style photo
shoots as gifts for Kim and other elderly women at the House of Sharing,
a museum and nursing home for South Koreans forced into brothels by
Japan during World War II. Kim and many of the other women never
married, giving the pictures a measure of bitterness.

"That could
have been my life: Meet a man, get married, have children, have
grandchildren," Kim said in her small, tidy room at the nursing home
south of Seoul. "But it never happened. It could never be."

Japanese soldiers stole her youth, she says, and now, "The Japanese are waiting for us to die."

There
are only 55 women left who registered with the South Korean government
as former sex slaves from the war — down from a peak of more than 230.
Their average age is 88.

As their numbers dwindle and a rising
Japanese nationalism provokes anger from war victims in South Korea and
China, the 10 women who live at the House of Sharing know they're
running out of time to pressure Tokyo to make amends.